(1) Field of the Invention
The invention relates to turbomachinery. More particularly, the invention relates to gas turbine engines having compressor bleeds.
(2) Description of the Related Art
Axial flow gas turbine engines include a compressor, a combustor and a turbine. A core flowpath for medium gases extends through these portions of the engine. During operation, the gases are pressurized in the compressor and fuel is added in the combustor. The fuel is burned to add energy to the pressurized gases. The hot, pressurized gases are expanded through the turbine to provide the work of hot, high pressure gases for subsequent use. Common gas turbine engine configurations divide the combustor and turbine into high and low speed/pressure sections whose blades are mounted on respective high and low speed spools. Additionally, a broad spectrum of turbine engines provide a bypass wherein the turbine (typically the low speed section) drives a fan which, in turn, propels gas along a flowpath bypassing the core flowpath.
Under certain conditions, air is bled from a compressor section for one or more purposes. The air may be bled for use such as in cooling. Alternatively, however, the air may be bled to reduce the load on the associated turbine section under certain operating conditions. An exemplary such operating condition is a transient startup condition. Such load-reducing bleeds may be controlled by a bleed valve. U.S. Pat. No. 6,092,987 of Honda et al., the disclosure which is incorporated by reference herein, discloses a stator assembly having a valve ring moveable between first and second conditions in which the ring respectively blocks and opens communication through bleed openings in a stator housing. Shifting between the first and second conditions is via a combination of rotation and longitudinal translation so as to provide a mechanical advantage. Nevertheless, there remains room for further improvement in bleed valve technology.
Accordingly, one aspect of the invention involves a gas turbine engine having a fan and a compressor. The compressor is along a core flowpath and has a number of rows of blades, a number of rows of vanes, and a number of shroud rings. At least a bleed one of the shroud rings defines a number of bleed ports. A structural hub is downstream of the shroud rings and is secured relative to the shroud rings. A structural case extends from an aft joint with the structural hub to a fore joint with a joined one of the shroud rings. The structural case has a number of valve ports. At least a portion of the structural case extends structurally between fore and aft joints. A valve element is shiftable between first and second conditions. In the first condition the valve element blocks communication through the valve ports. In the second condition the valve element does not block that communication.
In various implementations, the joined one of the shroud rings may not be the bleed one of the shroud rings. The bleed one of the shroud rings may comprise a shroud ring of an exit guide vane assembly and a bleed duct. The exit guide vane assembly may have a number of duct portions associated with aft portions of the bleed ports. The bleed duct may have a number of duct portions associated with fore portions of the bleed ports. The joined one of the shroud rings may be immediately upstream of the bleed one of the shroud rings. The valve element may be so shiftable via a combined circumferential rotation and longitudinal translation. The valve element may carry an outboard aft seal and an inboard fore seal for sealing with the structural case in the first condition. A bleed flowpath through the bleed ports and the valve ports may further extend through the structural hub to join a fan bypass flow. The structural hub may contain at least one fan exit guide vane. The bleed flowpath may join a fan bypass flow downstream of the fan exit guide vane.
Another aspect of the invention involves a gas turbine engine wherein a structural case extends from an aft joint with a structural hub to a fore joint with a joined one of a number of shroud rings. The structural case may have a number of valve ports. At least a portion of the structural case may extend as a continuous piece between the fore and aft joints.
In various implementations, the joined one of the shroud rings may be immediately upstream of a bleed one of the shroud rings. The structural hub may carry a number of fan exit guide vanes.
Another aspect of the invention involves a method for assembling a gas turbine engine. The method involves assembling an exit guide vane assembly including an aftmost of a number of shroud rings to a structural hub. A structural case is assembled to the structural hub. An assembly of the shroud rings is assembled to the structural case with at least one of the shroud rings being at least partially inserted within the structural case.
In various implementations, at least one fan exit guide vane may be preassembled with the structural hub. The aftmost of the shroud rings may have a number of duct portions associated with aft portions of the bleed ports. A penultimate shroud ring may have a number of duct portions associated with fore portions of the bleed ports. The valve element may be assembled to the structural case after the structural case is assembled to the structural hub.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
A compressor shroud assembly 47 essentially provides the outboard boundary of the core flowpath 502. The assembly 47 includes a number of annular shrouds generally assembled end-to-end. Each of the shrouds may, itself, be segmented circumferentially, with the circumferential segments secured end-to-end.
The shroud 51 has an upstream bolting flange 60 mounted to the bolting flange 50 thereahead. The shroud 52 has a downstream bolting flange 62 mounted to an inboard upstream bolting flange 64 on a radial circumferential web 66 of a fan hub or rotor support frame 68 which forms a principal structural component of the engine. The fan hub 68 may be fabricated by welding together several circumferentially stacked pieces. In the illustrated embodiment, an inboard piece includes a circumferential array of struts 70 extending outboard to a shroud portion 72. Fore and aft circumferential webs 66 and 74 extend from the shroud portion 72 and are connected by longitudinal webs 76. An outboard piece 80 is joined to inboard piece 82 along a weld 84. The inboard piece has an outboard longitudinal circumferential web 86 and the outboard piece has inboard and outboard longitudinal circumferential webs 88 and 90. In the exemplary embodiment, the fore and aft radial circumferential webs 66 and 74 extend along both pieces and may alternatively be referenced as combined webs of the two pieces. For reference, certain areas of these webs identified as flanges may be thickened or otherwise reinforced although alternatively the term web may be used to identify the section of web material between the flanges.
At its outboard end, the outboard piece 80 is secured to root portions 92 of fan exit guide vanes 94 via fore and aft hub bolting flanges 96 and 98 and corresponding fore and aft vane bolting flanges 97 and 99.
A structural case 100 has an inboard surface defining an outboard extreme of the bleed plenum 58. The structural case 100 extends from a forward/upstream bolting flange 102 to an aft/downstream bolting flange 104. The upstream bolting flange 102 is mounted to an intermediate bolting flange 106 of the shroud 48. The downstream bolting flange 104 is mounted to a bolting flange 106 on the web 66 outboard of the bolting flange 74 and just inboard of the weld 84. The structural case 100 has a plurality of apertures 110 which may be selectively blocked by an annular valve element 112. The valve element 112 may be shiftable between open and closed conditions (the closed condition being shown) respectively exposing and blocking the apertures or ports 110 via a combined rotation and longitudinal translation as in the aforementioned '987 patent and may be provided with an appropriate actuator (not shown) to effect movement between such conditions.
A bleed flowpath 506 extends through the bleed port 54 and duct 56 into the bleed plenum 58. With the valve element 112 in its open condition, the bleed flowpath further continues through the valve ports 110 and into an outboard plenum 114. The outboard plenum is generally bounded by the structural case 100 and shroud assembly 47 thereahead on the inboard side, the web 66 along the second web piece 80 on the aft side, and a flow divider (splitter) 116 separating the outboard plenum from the bypass flowpath 504. Therefrom, the flowpath proceeds through a port or window 120 in the forward web 66 along the outboard piece 80 of the structural hub 68. The flowpath proceeds through a window 122 in the outboard web 90. The flowpath may then pass between aft bolting flanges 99 of adjacent exit guide vanes 94 inboard of their platforms 124 to, downstream of trailing edges 126 of such platforms, merge with the bypass flowpath 504.
The use of a structural case having the valve ports 110 (as opposed to placing the valve ports in a totally separate non-structural member) may facilitate an advantageous assembly process. The exist guide vanes may be preassembled to the structural hub. The last shroud 52 may then be bolted to the hub. The structural case may then be bolted to the hub. The shrouds 51 and 48 may be preassembled as may be the shrouds thereahead. This shroud subassembly may then be assembled to the structural case with the process including an insertion of the shroud 51 and a portion of the shroud 48 within the structural case followed by securing with bolts. The valve element (or elements) 112 may have been preassembled with the structural case or may be assembled after assembly of the case to the hub or after assembly of the shroud subassembly to the case. Thereafter the splitter may be installed.
One or more embodiments of the present invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the principles may be applied as a modification of a preexisting engine configuration. In such a situation, details of the preexisting configuration would influence details of the particular implementation. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.